Ramsium Temple
 
Ramsium is a funerary temple built for the dead in ancient Egypt. Built by King Ramses II, it is the most of the kings with whom temples were built. The temple includes huge statues of King Ramses II and an important aspect of the inscriptions that tell the nature of life in that period. The pictures and inscriptions that adorn the wall of the temple record the facts of the famous Battle of Kadesh in which King Ramses II defeated the Hittites and how he planned the war.
The temple is also known as the palace of millions of years. The Greek historian Rioros called it the grave mistake “or Simandias”, a false Greek interpretation of Ramses II’s ancient name.
The temple is considered one of the most beautiful temples in Egypt, as it consists of the road remains and broken Osirite columns and a huge edifice, half of which fell, and its ceilings appeared to be made of brick, which rises on one level with the wall of the temple.
And the mission of the Egyptian-French Antiquities headed by Christian Leblanc working at the Ramsium temple in the Western mainland in Luxor has found important remains from the temple dating back to the age of the 19 and 20 Pharaonic families, which includes a group of public kitchens, butcher buildings and huge stores in addition to the school that was dedicated to educating the children of workers.